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Don’t Toss the Pig Skin! Use It For Braciole – AKA Cotenne

If there is anything left to contribute to the persistent food trend of nose-to-tail eating, first popularized by British chef Fergus Henderson and then expanded on by countless chefs, writers, and restaurateurs, it is cotenna, or pig skin, from the traditional Southern Italian red sauce.

A huge pot of meatballs and sausages simmering in an inferno of tomatoes, garlic and herbs is the memory that trumps all others in the Italian-American experience.

Photo: Casey Barber

Braciole, rolled-up slices of thinly cut beef, is also a stock character of Sunday sauce—whether it be the Neapolitan version layered with cheese and parsley, or Sicilian braciole, which are stuffed with raisins.

But braciole made from pig skin are hard to come by, despite the luxurious velvety texture they add to tomato sauce.

Those with memories of their Italian grandparents rolling up pig skin braciole likely won’t recognize the cotenna, the proper Italian word for a pig skin or rind.

Photo: Casey Barber

Near Naples and Salerno, the local accent pronounces it cotica, cutica or coodica. In Sicily, it’s called agodina.

Just like beef braciole, it is layered with cheese, chopped parsley, rolled up and secured with long toothpicks or butcher’s twine.

The cotenne should be browned first in a hot pan with a little bit of olive oil, then left to braise in tomato sauce alongside other meats for at least two hours.

Photo: Casey Barber

This very traditional dish, rich with the culinary ancestry of Southern Italy, has fallen far out of favor in contemporary Italian cooking.

Two of the very best writers on Italian-American food, Michele Scicolone and Lidia Bastianich, have stripped cotenne out of their recipes for traditional Sunday ragus.

For his, cookbook author Arthur Schwartz adds pork shoulder with some of the skin still on to create the “velvety richness.”

In the Naples episode of the foodie travelogue No Reservations, host Anthony Bourdain went in search of the “red sauce trail,” starting in New York and ending in the kitchen of a typical Neapolitan nonna and her Sunday ragu.

I hoped that Bourdain, an unabashed, nearly rabid pork-ophile, might stumble upon cutica in Nonna’s pot. But these days, the more common Neapolitan version of ragu uses marbled beef for fat content.

Photo: Casey Barber

Pork rinds have been made chic, and trotters and snouts are found in some of the world’s best restaurants. So will cotenne have their moment?

Admittedly, the texture might be hard to overcome. Crispy skin on the outside of roasted pork tastes almost like a piece of salty candy, but a braised pork skin braciole leaves no illusion that it is anything other than skin.

The best and possibly only restaurant to try it is in New York at Zero, Otto, Nove. Chef Roberto Paciullo, a Salerno native, absolutely includes cutica in his ragu Salernitano. And until April Bloomfield discovers and elevates cutica, you can always try it at home.

You will likely need to ask a butcher for pork skin, as it not often found in supermarkets. If it is in stock, likely it will be very inexpensive.

Cotenne, or Pork Skin Braciole for Italian Red Sauce

Yield: 8 servings

Prep Time: 30 minutes

Cook Time: 2 hours

Total Time: 2 hours30 minutes

Cotenne, or pork skin braciole, is a traditional Southern Italian addition to tomato ragu. A rolled-up pork skin is browned and simmered in sauce.

About Danielle Oteri

Danielle Oteri is the founder of Feast on History, which offers walks, classes, tastings and dinner parties that bring culinary history to life. A tireless sleuth of everything tasty, Danielle writes about subjects as diverse as saints, butchers, and hole-in-the-wall restaurants. She contributes stories about culinary history and Italo-centric recipes.

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